We are all aware that the giant panda is an endangered species. Researchers at the University of Twente’s Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC) have suggested that these animals are becoming increasing endangered due to local inbreeding. This was announced in an article published by Tiejun Wang and Andrew Skidmore on 18 January, at the website of the leading scientific journal Nature.
Only about 1,800 giant pandas remain in the wild. This panda
normally has black-and-white colouration, but there are increasing
sightings of the rare brown-and-white panda. According to Tiejun
Wang, a researcher at the University of Twente's ITC faculty, the
recent sighting of a two-month-old brown-and-white panda was the
seventh time that these pandas have been spotted in the past 25
years. Researchers are now suggesting that this is due to
inbreeding. This is quite a large number for giant pandas, as they
have a low rate of reproduction. Accordingly, there is no
convincing explanation for the number involved.
Dr Wang worked in China's Qinling Mountains for twenty years,
one of six areas where giant pandas still live in the wild.
According to Dr Wang, the brown-and-white pandas are only seen in
the Qinling population. About 300 wild pandas live in the Qinling
Mountains, which amounts to one sixth of the total wild panda
population.
Inbreeding
Like humans, each panda has two copies of each gene, one from
the father and one from the mother. Dr Wang suggests that the
pandas in Qinling have a dominant gene for black-and-white
colouration and a recessive gene for brown-and-white. Those pandas
with two recessive genes are brown-and-white, while all of the
others are black-and-white. This means that pandas with
brown-and-white colouration only occur when the recessive 'brown'
gene is inherited from both the father and the mother. The
researcher suggests that there is normally a very low probability
that both parents will have the recessive gene for brown-and-white
colouration. However, the dense human population in this area has
caused the habitat of the Qinling pandas to become fragmented. In
this group of animals, therefore, there is a much higher
probability of pandas mating with close relatives. As a result, the
presence of brown-and-white pandas may be an indication of local
inbreeding.
Tiejun Wang and his colleagues at ITC, Andrew Skidmore and Bert
Toxopeus, who have worked in this field for the past twelve years,
are concerned that the increasing incidence of the brown-and-white
panda is a direct result of the reduction and fragmentation of the
pandas' habitat. This fragmentation results from human activities,
such as the construction of roads and the felling of forests.
The researchers are deeply concerned about such inbreeding, as
it means that more and more animals are depending on the same set
of genes, which in turn increases their risk of extinction.
Further details:
The full article can be found
here.
Scientific writer UT
Rianne Wanders
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